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Surgical loop delivery device

a delivery device and surgical technology, applied in the field of surgical loop delivery devices, can solve the problems of difficult to carry out in the environment associated with minimally invasive surgery, new problems are presented, and prior techniques are difficult to carry ou

Inactive Publication Date: 2000-11-28
WW7
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

It is a main object of the present invention to provide a device for ligating anatomical tissue that can accommodate tissue targets that are larger than the main body of the instrument.
With the system of the present invention, the tissue and the loop can be properly managed whereby a single surgeon can orient the tissue and the loop with respect to each other for proper ligating. By stably holding the loop open and knowing where the tissue is, the surgeon using the system of the present invention can make the combination and complete a rather difficult procedure with ease. With the additional feature of being able to maintain sight of the tissue as it is engaged in the loop and enabling the surgeon to determine proper tissue margins, the system of the present invention makes this difficult procedure easy with respect to prior art devices.

Problems solved by technology

This is difficult to carry out in the environment associated with minimally invasive surgery.
However, these prior techniques are difficult to carry out due to the problems mentioned above.
As the instruments get smaller, new problems are presented.
It may be difficult to capture large targets, especially using the prior devices such as discussed in the parent disclosures.
For example, if the target is too large, it cannot be efficiently drawn into the device.
As the device, or instrument, gets smaller, the number of tissue targets larger than the device becomes larger, and the number of targets that may not be efficiently drawn into the device may also increase.
Since the prior devices do not accommodate such large tissue targets, they have no means for such outside loop manipulation.
While the prior art does include loops on loop holders, these loop holders have several drawbacks, including allowing the loop to twist during manipulation, as well as the difficulty of maintaining the loop and the tissue properly oriented with respect to each other.
Furthermore, a flaccid loop is often produced by these prior art devices.
In the environment of interest here, the thin, flexible and flaccid suture loop is extremely susceptible to collapsing prior to target acquisition.
This presents a very difficult and frustrating problem to the surgeon.
Furthermore, ligature loop stability becomes more difficult the larger the loop.
However, if the loop is to be used in connection with tissue larger than the device, the loop must be moved outside the device.
Loop support thus becomes a problem.
If the surgical loop is to be used with both small and large targets, if the loop is enlarged to encircle the large targets, its un-enlarged size may be too large for very small targets.
This may degrade the results of the procedure, alternatively, it may reduce the size of the largest target that can be encircled by the loop since loops cannot be enlarged beyond a certain ratio.
Thus, the smallest size target will limit the range of target sizes.
However, in the prior art devices, when tissue is drawn into the bore of the prior art devices, it disappears from the surgeon's view.
Thus, in the prior art, it is difficult to see how far one has retracted the tissue up into the bore with the tissue grasper.
This in turn makes it difficult to determine the margin between the end of the tissue and the ligating loop.
Too much tension on the loop may damage the tissue, and too little tension on the loop may vitiate the viability of the procedure.
Since minimally invasive surgery has extreme space constraints, it is extremely difficult to carry out surgical steps that require more than one set of hands.

Method used

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Embodiment Construction

By way of background, a summary of the operation of the preferred form of the device disclosed in the parent disclosures will be presented. A full disclosure thereof is presented in the parent disclosures and is incorporated herein by reference.

A surgical loop delivery device 10 disclosed in FIG. 1 of the parent disclosure is also shown in FIG. 1 herein and reference is made thereto, along with FIGS. 2-7 herein. Device 10 includes a main body 20 having a distal end 22 that will be located in a patient during the procedure and a proximal end 24 that will be accessed by a surgeon during a procedure. A hand-grip 26 is mounted near proximal end 24 to be available to a user's hand. A tissue grasping instrument 30 extends through device 10 to engage and grasp tissue T and draw that tissue into the instrument as indicated in FIGS. 1-3.

Referring to FIG. 5, it can be seen that device 10 includes a suture supporting element 40 on which suture 42 is mounted to extend across a slot 44 and be an...

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Abstract

A surgical loop delivery device is disclosed in parent disclosures Ser. No. 09 / 071,811 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,766,217. This device is improved to permit tissue targets larger than the device to be ligated while also maintaining a clear sight path between the surgeon and the target. The surgical loop is also stable during the procedure.

Description

The present invention relates to the general art of surgery, and to the particular field of ligating tissue targets.As discussed in the parent disclosures which are incorporated herein by reference, many modern surgical procedures utilize small incisions through which instruments are inserted to perform the surgery in a minimally invasive manner.One surgical technique delivers a suture loop to a tissue target, such as a polyp or the like. The loop is then placed around the target and the target is garrotted. The loop must be held open long enough and with sufficient size and stability to encircle the target and then must be managed to be efficiently tightened around the target. This is difficult to carry out in the environment associated with minimally invasive surgery. In some cases, it requires more than one person to effect the target garrotting, and even then can be onerous since the loop must remain open and in a stable configuration suitable for carrying out the procedure.The ...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Patents(United States)
IPC IPC(8): A61B17/12A61B17/30A61B17/04
CPCA61B17/0483A61B17/12013A61B2017/303
Inventor CHRISTY, WILLIAM J.CHRISTY, JAMES R.WILLIAMSON IV, WARREN P.BERKY, CRAIG
Owner WW7
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